We still need to solve a couple of problems, but even so, its become my primary audio player at home.
We're aiming at taking a few orders around May 15 for shipment on June 1. We'll offer in introductory discount. I'd like to get the price down to $295, but it's tight.
Here's the description:
http://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/Id
I don't think the beta members are our primary target since many are more than capable of building their own equivalent. But I'm interested in your take on this, including any typos or errors.
Thanks,
Jim
I think that's a really good pitch, and will appeal to many folks. I think it'll be a nice device that answers a "felt need." I do have two questions about the "portable media player" section.
1) When I read "portable media player" I think of something like an Ipod or a Sansa Clip, i.e. something battery-powered with a headphone jack. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_media_player. The Id won't have a battery, right? If not, some folks might come to the wrong conclusion about the device. It might not be an issue in practice, but I wanted to mention it as it's the first place my brain went. It might be worth clarifying in the ad copy, or using something a little vaguer for the heading like "Take your media with you," or "Portable media server."
2) You mention hooking the Id directly to an amp; does the stereo jack put out a high-impedance line-level output, or a low-impedance amplified output (i.e. suitable for headphones)? Most 1/8 inch jacks are only one or the other (although I've seen some that can be switched). There can be problems from hooking up a low-impedance headphone output to the input of an amp. Obviously lots of folks hook up the outputs of laptops to amps everyday, and it's not usually an issue, but depending on the specifics, double amplification can cause some amps to act flaky due to the impedance mismatch. Not sure it's necessarily a problem for the Id (I don't have a NUC nearby to measure the output impedance), but it may be worth taking a measurement to confirm it's not a super low impedance output (which might create support issues down the road).
That's just what I thought of reading through the copy; I'm looking forward to seeing the roll out!